Stock Profits Without
Forecasting
During major sustained advances in stock prices, which
usually occupy from five to seven years of each decade, the investor can
complacently hold a list of stocks which are currently unpredictable. He
doesn't worry about the top because he knows he is never going to sell at the
top. He knows that the chances are
overwhelming in favour of the assumption that he will get far better prices by
waiting until after the top is passed and a probable reversal in trend can be
identified than he will ever get by attempting to anticipate the top, and
get out on the nose. In my own
experience the largest profits we have ever taken have come from stocks
purchased while they were making a new high in a market which was also
momentarily expecting the top.
As I have already
pointed out the absolute price of a stock is unimportant. It is the direction
of the price movement that counts. It is always probable, but never
certain, that the direction of the price movement will continue. Soon after it reverses is time enough to
sell. You should sell when you wish you had sold sooner, never when you think
the top has arrived. That way you will never get the very best price—by
hindsight your individual transactions will never look daring. But some of your
profits will be large, and your losses should be quite small. That is all that
is necessary for a satisfactory, enriching investment performance.
Stock Profits Without
Forecasting, by Edgar S. Genstein
No comments:
Post a Comment